On Monday, 16 December, 1929, New South Wales Premier Bavin sent armed police into the coal mines to protect scabs sent to do the work of honest men.

At Rothbury that day, there were between five and six thousand pickets outside the mine.The following account is taken from The Builders’ Labourers’ Song Book (p. 93-96):………………………….At 5.45 am the miners crossed the perimeter fence and the police opened fire.

On page 1 of the Melbourne Herald of the 16th December the following headlines were splashed across the page:

The facts of the police attack are told by R. Gollan in his book “The Coalminers of New South Wales”.

“As the pickets who had marched on Rothbury during the night, with apparently no concerted plan other than to demonstrate and threaten the ‘Scabs’, approached the boundary fence, police opened fire and launched baton charges. One young man, Norman Brown, was killed and many others wounded, how many it is impossible to tell, as the wounded were hurriedly got away in case their wounds were used in evidence against them. The events of Rothbury stirred the Labor movement to its depths. Meetings throughout the country denounced the brutality of the Government. For example, a meeting at Lithgow referred to ‘cold blooded murder of our comrades by the Police of the Bavin Government’.”

Newspaper articles of the time reported on the people that were known to be injured. Mr Booth, an M.L.A. who saw the incident was reported as saying in the Herald on 17 December “Norman Brown, the man who was killed, was about sixty-five yards from the fence when the bullet struck him. He had been sitting down, talking to a girlfriend and was just getting up when he was hit Woods who was seriously wounded in the throat, was shot from a distance of fifteen feet.”

The New South Wales Northern District President of the union said: “As we got through the fence, police seemed to come through every bush and began to fell men right and left with their batons. They had us channelled into two lines by the three lines of wagons.

“The mounted police came through. and were merciless in their attacks. An old chap of about seventy years of age was batoned to his knees. Then the guns came out and there was a dozen men lying prostrate in no time….my recollection is that there were several bursts of firing, and each time the men would retreat and, when there was a lull, move back to the fence. The whole affair must have gone on for about four hours. There were strong rumours that the police had machine guns and steam hoses ready to be used if necessary. I was close to Wally Woods when he was shot in the throat - quite deliberately.”

Norman Brown, who was twenty-eight years old, was shot in the stomach. He died on the way to hospital.………………….

There are several songs that commemorate the events at Rothbury when the armed forces of the state were called out by the coal mine bosses to savage the miners.